Diana crash report: New details emerge on mystery car
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Princess Diana
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Witnesses saw 'zigzagging" Fiat Uno
December 31, 1997
Web posted at: 10:46 a.m. EST (1546 GMT)
PARIS (CNN) -- Four months after the death of Princess Diana,
a new police report quotes two witnesses who saw a white Fiat
Uno "zigzagging" out of the tunnel where she died, and they
described the car's driver.
Police submitted the 400-page report this week to
investigating judge Herve Stephan. A source who saw the
confidential document told CNN what it contains.
The report does not appear to contain any earth-shattering
revelations. Still, the witness accounts revealed Wednesday
-- but known to police since September 18 -- are the most
precise so far on the mysterious second car long believed to
have played a role in the crash.
Investigators have been trying to find a small white car,
probably a Fiat Uno, that the Mercedes Diana was riding in is
believed to have sideswiped just before losing control and
crashing into a pillar in the Pont de l'Alma traffic tunnel.
The August 31 accident killed Diana, her boyfriend Dodi Fayed,
and driver Henri Paul. Bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones was
the sole survivor.
Key factors in the crash are still believed to be alcohol --
Paul was legally drunk -- and excessive speed.
Witnesses were driving near tunnel
The witnesses, a couple identified in the report only as
"Francois," a financial director, and "Valerie," told police
that after dining at a restaurant near the Pont de l'Alma,
they got in their car and were driving on a road parallel to
the traffic tunnel.
According to the police report, just past the tunnel exit,
they were passed by a white Fiat Uno, the source said. The
man said he recognized the car model because his
mother-in-law had the same one.
The car's exhaust pipe was making a loud noise as if it had
been damaged, and the driver was driving abnormally --
"zigzagging" -- and then cut off the couple's car, the
witnesses were quoted as saying.
The Fiat's driver was "a European type," about 40 years old,
with brown hair, the witnesses said. In the back seat of his
car was a large dog.
The witnesses went to see police September 18, the report
said. Although a number of witness accounts have leaked out
since the start of the investigation, these two were kept
secret until first reported Wednesday morning by the French
newspaper Le Parisien.
The newspaper reported one recent false alarm: Police thought
they were close to finding the car when they questioned a man
fitting the driver's description. He had a large dog and a
Fiat Uno he recently had repaired and repainted red. But he
couldn't be linked to the crash, and was released.
So far, authorities have checked thousands of cars registered
in the Paris area in an attempt to find the Fiat.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.